Sociosexual Narcissist: CRM vs. Agency Models (Clip Skopje Seminar Opening, May 2025)
Session details
- Informal opening: multilingual greeting (German/French), speaker mentioned living in Czech Republic and Poland. Session presented as a Q&A; additional questions would be handled during a later Q&A when the speaker was not present.
Main topics discussed
- Sociosexuality and narcissism
- Definition: “Sociosexual” describes an attitude (sociosexuality) — willingness to have sex outside a committed relationship. It is an attitudinal dimension and does not necessarily imply action.
- Association: Sociosexuality in narcissists tends to align with short-term sexual behavior and openness to casual sex, though attitude does not inevitably lead to behavior.
- Contextual Reinforcement Model (CRM) of narcissism
- Core idea: Narcissists seek novelty and instability; they prefer short-term, destabilizing contexts over stable, long-term ones.
- Behavioral implications: Narcissists may intentionally destabilize environments and relationships to maintain stimulation and avoid feelings of suffocation in stable settings.
- Example/metaphor used: an attraction to novel, extravagant items (e.g., expensive airplanes) as an illustration of novelty-seeking.
- Agency model of narcissism (five elements)
- Purpose: Presented as an alternative model to CRM; summarized to answer audience questions.
- Five elements:
- Agency focus: Narcissists prioritize agency — performance, action, and goal attainment — over communal values. They are goal-oriented and driven to obtain outcomes.
- Inflated self-concept: Narcissists maintain an exaggerated or grandiose self-view.
- Self-enhancement and self-regulation: Narcissists solicit feedback and other forms of validation to maintain and bolster their grandiose self-image.
- Entitlement: A pronounced sense of deservingness and expectation of preferential treatment.
- Approach orientation: Emphasis on rewards and immediate gratification rather than risks, costs, or long-term consequences.
- Contrast with psychopathy: Narcissists are primarily motivated by “narcissistic supply” (admiration/validation) while psychopaths pursue a broader set of objectives (sex, money, access, etc.).
- Communal (pro-social) narcissist — exception to the agency rule
- Description: A minority variant who adopts communal or moral posturing (ostentatious generosity, publicized donations, charitable acts) as a form of grandiosity.
- Behavior: Public displays of altruism and moral superiority serve self-enhancement purposes rather than genuine communal concern.
- Framing for the lecture
- The speaker positioned the CRM as the dominant model to be discussed in the main lecture; the sociosexuality and agency models were presented first as context and background.
- The session at hand was not the full lecture; it was primarily question-driven and preparatory for the main discussion of the psychodynamic model (mentioned as the upcoming dominant model to be covered).
Tone and presentation notes
- The talk was conversational and included humorous asides (e.g., “all your answers questioned, not all your questions answered”).
- Clarified that some material was answering pre-submitted questions rather than constituting the full lecture.
Key takeaways
- Narcissism can be conceptualized in multiple models: sociosexuality (attitude toward casual sex), the Contextual Reinforcement Model (novelty/instability seeking), and the Agency Model (five-part motivational/attitudinal profile).
- Most narcissists prioritize agency, immediate reward, and self-enhancement; only a small minority present as communal/pro-social narcissists.
- The speaker planned to focus next on the psychodynamic model as the dominant framework for understanding narcissism.
Action items / Next steps
- Audience encouraged to ask additional questions during a later Q&A when the speaker was not present.
- Upcoming lecture to cover the psychodynamic model in greater depth.
Notes on omissions / limits of this session
- This meeting was an introduction/overview addressing submitted questions; it did not provide an exhaustive lecture on the psychodynamic model, which was flagged as the next focus.





